Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Michael Franks (born September 18, 1944) is an American singer and songwriter, considered a leader of the quiet storm movement. He has recorded with a variety of well-known artists, such as Patti Austin, Art Garfunkel, Brenda Russell, Claus Ogerman, Joe Sample, and David Sanborn.

  2. Jul 24, 2018 · JazzTimes’ own Christopher Loudon once called Michael Franks “the trippy troubadour,” which has a nice alliterative ring to it that the literary singer/songwriter might well appreciate. The reality is that he’s not some old hippie burnt out on ’70s drugs, but rather a thoughtful and intellectual songwriter whose vocal style and ...

  3. Jun 26, 2023 · While viewing it, he free-associated words that eventually turned into the song that appears on the record. His fascination with art and artists manifested itself later in his career, as we’ll discover in an upcoming installment in this series.

  4. As long as Michael Franks continues to put pen to paper, lending life and voice to song, and creating poetically inspired albums such as Rendezvous in Rio, the tradition of true artistry will gracefully endure...like branches braving the night breeze in Brazilian banana trees.

  5. Sep 18, 2023 · The 1982 album Objects of Desire revisits a similar mood to Franks’ Tiger in the Rain, similarly featuring a painting on the album cover (Two Tahitian Women by Paul Gauguin). As we’ll see in an upcoming installment in this series, art will play a larger part in Michael Franks’ music.

  6. Oct 4, 2003 · Michael Franks, the ever-artful singer-songwriter and harvester of the most delectable musical passion fruit known to distingué lovers, recently released his 18th offering, Time Together, his first for Shanachie, and first since 2006's Rendezvous in Rio.

  7. People also ask

  8. www.soultracks.com › artist › michael-franksMichael Franks - SoulTracks

    Michael Franks is one of the most recognizable singers in popular music and, with his mellow voice and soft beats, became of the early purveyors of what later became known as “smooth jazz.”